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Biden’s Election-Reform Deception

If Joe Biden wants to keep voters informed about election reform, he should get his facts straight and apply standards equally.

Joe Biden (C), with Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin holds his first cabinet meeting in the East Room of the White House. Picture: AFP.
Joe Biden (C), with Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin holds his first cabinet meeting in the East Room of the White House. Picture: AFP.

In last week’s press conference, President Biden labelled Republican efforts to reform state election laws in Georgia and Iowa as “un-American” and “sick.” That charge is malarkey, to use one of the president’s favourite words.

Mr. Biden made three specific claims. First, that Republicans would “end voting at 5 o’clock when working people are just getting off work.” That isn’t true. No state closes its polls at 5pm. Iowa’s new law moved up closing time by an hour, but polls are still open from 7am to 8pm. Georgia’s election reforms left the state’s 7am to 7pm polling hours unchanged.

The president also charged “there will be no absentee ballots.” That’s also false. Iowa’s only absentee voting change was to say ballots must arrive by 8pm on Election Day. Georgia made all of one significant change to absentee voting: replacing the requirement that counties verify the signatures of mail-in voters. Instead, voters will provide the number from their driver’s license or free state-provided ID or a photocopy of the IDs given to government employees, military members or tribal members — making it easier and quicker to verify and process mail-in ballots.

Finally, the president also criticised “some states” for saying “you cannot bring water to people standing in line waiting to vote.” Here’s the fuller picture: Georgia clarified its law prohibiting electioneering within 150 feet of a polling place or 25 feet of anyone waiting in line by saying politically involved groups wooing voters with free food and drinks couldn’t operate that close to the polls and lines. If you’re more than 150 feet from the building and 25 feet from voters waiting in line, knock yourself out. Inside those lines, the law allows only for election officials providing “self-service water from an unattended receptacle to an elector waiting in line to vote.”

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Mr. Biden closed his remarks on the subject by calling Iowa and Georgia’s actions “despicable … the most pernicious thing” and declaring, “This makes Jim Crow look like Jim Eagle.” This is some weird phrasing: A crow and an eagle are both birds, the eagle more fearsome than the crow. Get it? But Mr. Biden is using unnecessarily incendiary language.

Using the Biden Standard, let’s compare the supposedly un-American and racist practices of Iowa and Georgia with — to pick one state — Delaware. Iowa and Georgia both allow unlimited, no-excuse absentee voting by mail. Any registered voter can vote by mail rather than waiting for Election Day. Neither state’s new reforms restrict the practice.

Unlike Iowa and Georgia, Delaware forbids no-excuse mail-in absentee voting. Only voters who meet a specific criteria can vote by mail, such as government employees; students; those with work or religious prohibitions, an illness or a disability; or those vacationing or living outside the U.S. Some have critiqued Georgia for capping the number of additional dropboxes for absentee ballots beyond the one required for each county at one per 100,000 active voters (of which the state has nearly 7.4 million) or one for every early voting site, whichever is fewer. But Delaware has about half as many dropbox locations per capita — only four across the entire state.

Joe Biden holds his first cabinet meeting in the East Room of the White House. Picture: AFP.
Joe Biden holds his first cabinet meeting in the East Room of the White House. Picture: AFP.

Moreover, both Iowa (since 1990) and Georgia (since 2004) have long had no-excuse in-person early voting. It’s available in Iowa during an election’s last 29 days. This year’s Georgia reforms require 17 mandatory days and two optional Sundays of early voting, up four days from last fall.

By contrast, Delaware has never allowed no-excuse early voting. To date, only voters eligible to cast mail-in absentee votes were allowed to vote early in-person. That is set to change in 2022, but even then Delaware will allow no-excuse, in-person early voting for only 10 days.

How about the bugaboo about requiring voter ID at the polls? All three states require it and accept many of the same forms (driver’s license, passport, etc.), though Iowa and Georgia provide free identification cards upon request. If Delaware voters don’t have such ID, they can “sign an affidavit of affirmation that the voter is the person listed on the election district record,” opening them to fines and possibly jail time if they aren’t.

So what’s the effect of these differences among the three states? While 59% of Iowa’s and 80% of Georgia’s votes last fall were cast early by mail or in-person, in Delaware only 29% were. Bottom line: Iowa and Georgia make it easier to vote than Delaware did last fall.

Mr. Biden said last week he’d “spend my time … educating the American public” about election reform. If he really wants to keep voters informed about election reform, the president should get his facts straight and apply his standards equally. Mr. Biden can either stop slandering Iowa and Georgia with accusations of racism or apply the same obnoxious label to the election practices of his home state, which has voted for him for nearly half a century. And oh, Delaware’s polls are open 7am to 8pm, just like Iowa’s.

Mr. Rove helped organise the political-action committee American Crossroads and is author of “The Triumph of William McKinley ” (Simon & Schuster, 2015).

The Wall St Journal

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/bidens-electionreform-deception/news-story/3de3eda5956b25d702e37da9957fb0b1